allegory
allegory
For "Gulliver's Travels" the answer is Allegory
The literary term used in Jonathan Swift's "A Voyage to Lilliput" to emphasize the ridiculousness of the English system of political appointments is satire. Through exaggeration and humor, Swift criticizes political corruption and inefficiency.
Personification.
A: Swift mocks the petty differences between the political parties.
There is metaphor, rythm, and rhyme
She is republican.
samuel johnson
she plays from her heart and soul. peace.
Jonathan Swift was never in prison. He was an Anglo-Irish satirist, essayist, and poet known for works such as "Gulliver's Travels" and "A Modest Proposal." Swift was a political writer and clergyman who used his writing to critique the political and social issues of his time.
This writing style is known as mock epic or mock-heroic. It often involves using grand language and elevated literary techniques to describe everyday or trivial events or subjects in a humorous or satirical way. Famous examples include Alexander Pope's "The Rape of the Lock" and Jonathan Swift's "The Battle of the Books."
Lindsay Swift has written: 'Literary landmarks of Boston' -- subject(s): Literary landmarks, Guidebooks 'Benjamin Franklin' 'Literary landmarks of Boston' -- subject(s): Literary landmarks, Guidebooks 'Literary landmarks of Boston' -- subject(s): Literary landmarks, Guidebooks 'William Lloyd Garrison' -- subject(s): Antislavery movements 'Brook Farm' -- subject(s): Brook Farm Phalanx (West Roxbury, Boston, Mass.) 'Catalogue of works relating to Benjamin Franklin in the Boston public library' -- subject(s): Bibliography